THE slightest excuse to wax lyrical about Darren Lehmann’s involvement with Yorkshire CCC is never one to be turned down, and what better justification than the fact that the club have just signed his son, Jake, for the rest of the County Championship campaign.

Lehmann junior will make his debut against Lancashire at Old Trafford today almost 10 years after his father ended a nine-year association with the White Rose.

It was in September, 2006 that Lehmann senior last played for the county, and you may well remember his final innings.

Why, he scored the small matter of 339 against Durham at Headingley, just two short of George Hirst’s county record, and then modestly stated that he was glad that he did not beat the record as “George Hirst was a much better player than I am”.

As an all-rounder, that may be true, given that Hirst was one of the finest to have graced the game.

But, purely as a batsman, it is interesting to reflect on Lehmann’s place in the Yorkshire pantheon.

In terms of statistics, which is all one can really go on when engaging in the admittedly futile task of trying to compare across eras, Lehmann stands in a class of his own.

In 88 first-class matches for the club, he scored 8,871 runs at an average of 68.76.

Although he played significantly fewer matches than many of the long-accepted Yorkshire greats, and although he did not play on uncovered pitches, and so on, no-one comes close to approaching that average.

Herbert Sutcliffe, the legendary opening batsman of the inter-war period, who played a whopping 602 first-class games for Yorkshire and is their all-time record run-scorer with 38,558, averaged 50.20.

Geoffrey Boycott, who maintained exceptional standards for a quarter of a century, averaged 57.85 – the best average of any Yorkshire batsman who has played over a considerable length of time.

Len Hutton – considered by many to have been the greatest of all English batsmen – averaged 53.

Again, such players sustained their output over many years, but it nonetheless puts Lehmann’s figures into some kind of perspective.